Interested Observer wrote: » When it comes to something like a referendum I thought that they did have to give equal time to either side. For Covid related topics they obviously don't.
kuang1 wrote: » Watched "the social dilemma" on netflix yesterday. Brilliant watch. I'm going to watch it again with my 11 year old. Brilliant insights into the mechanisms of social media from some of the people who engineered it.
errlloyd wrote: » RBG has died. She was a pretty amazing person, but sadly her death is going to be the equivalent of throwing gasoline on an already stressful election burning out of control.
Neil3030 wrote: » Remember the rule on bears, Jaco: if it's brown, lay down if it's black, fight back if it's white, good night
Deleted User wrote: » An incredible person, gifted intellect and an exceptional communicator.After the Garland situation I think if a new candidate is forced through then the Democrats will absolutely retaliate by increasing the number of justices. It's a messy situation that will now become part of the political drama surrounding Trump. I don't think the Republican senate leader (McConnell) cares at all about any kind of fairness or decency in public life as highlighted by these two separate statements on the same topic: The greatest ever crook in American politics. Disgraceful human being.
[Deleted User] wrote: » An incredible person, gifted intellect and an exceptional communicator. After the Garland situation I think if a new candidate is forced through then the Democrats will absolutely retaliate by increasing the number of justices. .
ClanofLams wrote: » That and ending the filibuster will be their response I think.DC and Puerto Rico 51st and 52nd states makes sense also (regardless of what happens with court vacancy, this would go some ways towards levelling up the inherent disadvantage Democrats face in Senate).
Zzippy wrote: » is this being seriously considered, or just a suggestion? (adding states) I can see the rationale for PR, but DC is just a city and adding it as a state would surely just be to pack the Senate, there really is no other compelling reason to make a city a state.
irishbucsfan wrote: » There's nearly a million people in Washington DC who don't have a senator. They surely deserve to be represented in the senate?
Zzippy wrote: » For that few it would make more sense to give them a vote in the Maryland or Virginia elections and be represented by the senators for those states. A senator for a million people would be an outlier, even in the massively unrepresentative Senate.
thomond2006 wrote: » The NFL was absolutely mad craic today.
swiwi_ wrote: » If it's brown, you're ok If it's black, you've got malena If it's white, obstructive jaundice
The Parish King wrote: » Howdy good people - I’m having issues with broadband speed that I’m hoping someone could help with! We live in a somewhat rural area (about 45 mins from Dublin), and although there is an exchange installed within 1km that should be able to provide fibre speeds, the main players (Sky, Eir and Vodafone), are saying that the ports for the exchange are all in use so we can only get 12MB broadband. This sounds mad to me and being permanently on hold is slowly killing me....but I’m just wondering if anyone has experienced this before and managed to get it resolved?
Neil3030 wrote: » https://www.theguardian.com/world/2020/sep/24/close-to-100-accuracy-airport-enlists-sniffer-dogs-to-test-for-covid-19 Dogs: Immune to covid. Able to reliably sniff out the disease from sweat samples before people show symptoms. Happy to do it. Cats: Susceptible to Covid and possibly spread it. Couldn't be arsed helping even if they could. Let there be not even one further whisper of doubt - fu*k cats.